Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions

Foote and Morin (2016) reanalyse data published in our recent RADseq studies (Moura et al., 2014a, 2015) to address questions about the likelihood of differentiation in sympatry among killer whale populations in the North Pacific. However, they describe a demic version of sympatric differentiation,...

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Main Authors: Rus Hoelzel, Andre Moura
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Killer_whales_differentiating_in_geographic_sympatry_facilitated_by_divergent_behavioural_traditions/24365002
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author Rus Hoelzel
Andre Moura
author_facet Rus Hoelzel
Andre Moura
author_sort Rus Hoelzel
collection University of Lincoln: Research
description Foote and Morin (2016) reanalyse data published in our recent RADseq studies (Moura et al., 2014a, 2015) to address questions about the likelihood of differentiation in sympatry among killer whale populations in the North Pacific. However, they describe a demic version of sympatric differentiation, requiring reproductive isolation to evolve by ‘ecologically driven disruptive selection’ from a background of panmixia. As they point out, questions have been raised about the potential for maintaining linkage between loci associated with ecotype and reproductive isolation, though there are some convincing putative examples of sympatric speciation by this mechanism (for example, Gavrilets et al., 2007). However, we emphasise the potential role of spatial/temporal segregation in the process, as have various authors (for example, Mallet et al., 2009). We have consistently described a process for killer whales whereby the ‘social facilitation of prey location and capture’ (Hoelzel et al., 2007) leads resource specialists to differential spatial and temporal habitat use, even while occupying overlapping geographic ranges, and suggested that this promotes assortative mating and differentiation by both genetic drift and selection (for example, Hoelzel et al., 2007; Moura et al., 2014a, 2015).
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Killer Whale
Killer whale
genre_facet Killer Whale
Killer whale
geographic Foote
Moura
Pacific
geographic_facet Foote
Moura
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institution Open Polar
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long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.175,-66.175,-66.197,-66.197)
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https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Killer_whales_differentiating_in_geographic_sympatry_facilitated_by_divergent_behavioural_traditions/24365002
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spelling ftlincunivfig:oai:figshare.com:article/24365002 2025-01-16T22:53:55+00:00 Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions Rus Hoelzel Andre Moura 2016-11-02T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Killer_whales_differentiating_in_geographic_sympatry_facilitated_by_divergent_behavioural_traditions/24365002 unknown 10779/lincoln.24365002.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Killer_whales_differentiating_in_geographic_sympatry_facilitated_by_divergent_behavioural_traditions/24365002 CC BY 4.0 C161 - Marine biology C180 - Ecology C182 - Evolution C350 - Marine zoology C400 - Genetics Killer whales NotOAChecked Text Journal contribution 2016 ftlincunivfig 2024-10-08T04:39:07Z Foote and Morin (2016) reanalyse data published in our recent RADseq studies (Moura et al., 2014a, 2015) to address questions about the likelihood of differentiation in sympatry among killer whale populations in the North Pacific. However, they describe a demic version of sympatric differentiation, requiring reproductive isolation to evolve by ‘ecologically driven disruptive selection’ from a background of panmixia. As they point out, questions have been raised about the potential for maintaining linkage between loci associated with ecotype and reproductive isolation, though there are some convincing putative examples of sympatric speciation by this mechanism (for example, Gavrilets et al., 2007). However, we emphasise the potential role of spatial/temporal segregation in the process, as have various authors (for example, Mallet et al., 2009). We have consistently described a process for killer whales whereby the ‘social facilitation of prey location and capture’ (Hoelzel et al., 2007) leads resource specialists to differential spatial and temporal habitat use, even while occupying overlapping geographic ranges, and suggested that this promotes assortative mating and differentiation by both genetic drift and selection (for example, Hoelzel et al., 2007; Moura et al., 2014a, 2015). Article in Journal/Newspaper Killer Whale Killer whale University of Lincoln: Research Foote ENVELOPE(-66.175,-66.175,-66.197,-66.197) Moura ENVELOPE(28.483,28.483,66.450,66.450) Pacific
spellingShingle C161 - Marine biology
C180 - Ecology
C182 - Evolution
C350 - Marine zoology
C400 - Genetics
Killer whales
NotOAChecked
Rus Hoelzel
Andre Moura
Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title_full Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title_fullStr Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title_full_unstemmed Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title_short Killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
title_sort killer whales differentiating in geographic sympatry facilitated by divergent behavioural traditions
topic C161 - Marine biology
C180 - Ecology
C182 - Evolution
C350 - Marine zoology
C400 - Genetics
Killer whales
NotOAChecked
topic_facet C161 - Marine biology
C180 - Ecology
C182 - Evolution
C350 - Marine zoology
C400 - Genetics
Killer whales
NotOAChecked
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Killer_whales_differentiating_in_geographic_sympatry_facilitated_by_divergent_behavioural_traditions/24365002